Bourse stocks down for 5th session amid foreign outflows; political woes weigh

Friday, 4 October 2019 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: Stocks fell for the fifth straight session on Thursday to a more than 10-week closing low, as foreign investors sold the island nation’s risky assets, while the rupee closed lower.

Investors were worried of political uncertainty after the Supreme Court set up a three-judge panel on 30 September to hear a petition challenging the citizenship of presidential nominee Gotabaya Rajapaksa, which could disqualify the former Defence Chief from the 16 November elections, stock brokers said. 

Dealers said fears of a possible court decision that could disqualify Rajapaksa’s nomination weighed on the market. The Supreme Court heard the petition for the second day on Thursday.  The benchmark stock index ended 0.36% lower at 5,677.50, its lowest since 22 July. The bourse fell 0.38% last week. So far this year, the index has dropped 5.9%. 

The index rose in a couple of sessions last week, after the Central Bank said on Tuesday that the Monetary Board had ordered banks to reduce interest rates on all loans and advances by at least 200 basis points by 15 October. 

Equity market turnover was Rs. 696.4 million ($3.84 million), less than this year’s daily average of about Rs. 657.8 million. Last year’s daily average was Rs. 834.0 million.  Foreign investors were net sellers of Rs. 257.3 million worth of shares on Thursday, extending the year-to-date net foreign outflow to Rs. 2.88 billion of equities, according to index data. 

Meanwhile the rupee ended 0.1% weaker at 181.30/70 per dollar compared to Wednesday’s close of 181.00/182.10. The rupee fell 0.41% last week. However, the currency is up 0.38% this year. 

The International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for Sri Lanka’s 2019 economic growth to 2.7% from 3.5%, as the Easter Sunday attacks on hotels and churches earlier this year dented tourism and broader business activity. 

Foreign outflows from government securities, one of the major reasons behind the rupee’s recent weakness, may not abate till the end of Parliament Elections in 2020, some analysts said. 

The Central Bank does not release foreign trade numbers on a daily basis, but weekly data in the past four weeks has shown a steady outflow. 

Foreign investors sold government securities worth Rs. 439 million in the week ended 25 September, extending the net foreign outflow so far this year to Rs. 55.3 billion through 25 September, according to Central Bank data.

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